Currency shocks knock platinum to 10-year lows
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[August 17, 2018]
By Peter Hobson
LONDON (Reuters) - Platinum prices tumbled
to 10-year lows as the collapse of Turkey's lira rippled through markets
and weakened the currency of top producer South Africa, underlining
persistent oversupply of the autocatalyst metal.
Platinum has been caught in a broad sell-off as investors rush to the
safety of the dollar, pushing it higher and making dollar-priced metals
more expensive for buyers using other currencies.
But platinum, used mainly in emissions-reducing catalytic converters for
vehicles and in jewelry, has fallen further than its precious metal
peers.
Once much more valuable than gold and palladium, platinum <XPT=> has
tumbled 25 percent from January highs to below $780 an ounce. This week
it hit its lowest since October 2008 and a new record low relative to
gold <XAU=>.
(Platinum demand: https://reut.rs/2L7m87R)
"It (platinum's outlook) has changed and the reason is the weakness of
the rand," said Julius Baer analyst Carsten Menke.
The rand has fallen more than 10 percent against the dollar in a week,
boosting the local earnings of South African companies who produce
around 70 percent of the world's mined platinum and relieving pressure
on them to cut output.
These cuts are needed to tackle stubborn oversupply as demand continues
to flatline.
Analysts at Metals Focus expect a surplus of 40,000 ounces in 2018 in
the roughly 8 million ounce a year platinum market. Johnson Matthey <JMAT.L>
predicts for this year a larger oversupply of 316,000 ounces, the
biggest since 2011.
The average production cash cost in South Africa - a measure of direct
expenses such as labor, fuel and electricity - was $834 an ounce last
year, according to Metals Focus.
"If the rand is weaker it gives producers more breathing space. The
longer it stays weaker, the longer we have a stay of execution for some
of these higher cost operations," said Jonathan Butler at Mitsubishi.
(Platinum price technicals: https://reut.rs/2Pe3qhD)
Platinum had already been falling this year as the rising dollar and
fears that trade disputes will damage economic growth and curtail demand
turned investors against the metal.
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Ingots of 99.98 percent pure platinum are seen at the Krastsvetmet
non-ferrous metals plant, one of the world's largest producers in
the precious metals industry, in the Siberian city of Krasnoyarsk,
Russia, March 9, 2017. REUTERS/Ilya Naymushin
Speculative bets on lower prices outnumber bets on higher prices on NYMEX for
the first time since 2001. Positioning has swung from a net long in March of
more than 40,000 contracts equivalent to over 2 million ounces to a net short of
407,150 ounces. <1076651NNET>
(Platinum positioning: https://reut.rs/2vP1qEk)
Underlying platinum's poor performance are also weaker sales of diesel cars
since Volkswagen <VOWG_p.DE> was found in 2015 to have cheated in emissions
tests. Autocatalysts use both platinum and palladium, but diesel engines use
more platinum.
But most analysts still expect prices to recover.
"The fundamental story has not really changed. If these levels are maintained,
producers will be under pressure to close operations," said Mitsubishi's Butler,
adding that demand was solid and low prices were attracting jewelers and
industrial buyers.
(Platinum vs gold and palladium: https://reut.rs/2vNvwYM)
Twenty-nine analysts polled by Reuters in July said they expected platinum to
average $922 an ounce this year and $979 in 2019.
On the technical side, platinum has broken below key support at $800, its 2016
low and two long term uptrend lines.
(Platinum vs dollar and rand: https://reut.rs/2PhLu5x)
"It (is) getting ever closer to the 2004 low at $761," said analysts at
Commerzbank. "Around (this level) we could see the precious metal stabilize. If
not, the 2008 trough at 732.50 could perhaps be reached as well."
But any uptick in prices could force speculative investors to rebalance their
bets, creating upward momentum, said ICBC Standard analyst Marcus Garvey.
"Getting back into high $800s or $900 is plausible on a positioning move," he
said. "Any sort of alleviation of dollar strength and it could happen."
(Reporting by Peter Hobson; Editing by Veronica Brown and Elaine Hardcastle)
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